학술논문

Mycobactericidal Effects of Different Regimens Measured by Molecular Bacterial Load Assay among People Treated for Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis in Tanzania
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Clinical Microbiology. 59(4)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Emerging Infectious Diseases
Antimicrobial Resistance
Infectious Diseases
Rare Diseases
Tuberculosis
Orphan Drug
Prevention
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Infection
Good Health and Well Being
Antitubercular Agents
Bacterial Load
Diarylquinolines
Humans
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
RNA
Ribosomal
16S
Tanzania
Tuberculosis
Multidrug-Resistant
Kibong'oto
MDR-TB treatment regimens
molecular bacterial load assay
multidrug-resistant TB
mycobactericidal effects
all-oral bedaquiline regimen
injectable aminoglycoside regimen
Biological Sciences
Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Microbiology
Clinical sciences
Medical microbiology
Language
Abstract
Rifampin or multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (RR/MDR-TB) treatment has largely transitioned to regimens free of the injectable aminoglycoside component, despite the drug class' purported bactericidal activity early in treatment. We tested whether Mycobacterium tuberculosis killing rates measured by tuberculosis molecular bacterial load assay (TB-MBLA) in sputa correlate with composition of the RR/MDR-TB regimen. Serial sputa were collected from patients with RR/MDR- and drug-sensitive TB at days 0, 3, 7, and 14, and then monthly for 4 months of anti-TB treatment. TB-MBLA was used to quantify viable M. tuberculosis 16S rRNA in sputum for estimation of colony forming units per ml (eCFU/ml). M. tuberculosis killing rates were compared among regimens using nonlinear-mixed-effects modeling of repeated measures. Thirty-seven patients produced 296 serial sputa and received treatment as follows: 13 patients received an injectable bedaquiline-free reference regimen, 9 received an injectable bedaquiline-containing regimen, 8 received an all-oral bedaquiline-based regimen, and 7 patients were treated for drug-sensitive TB with conventional rifampin/isoniazid/pyrazinamide/ethambutol (RHZE). Compared to the adjusted M. tuberculosis killing of -0.17 (95% confidence interval [CI] -0.23 to -0.12) for the injectable bedaquiline-free reference regimen, the killing rates were -0.62 (95% CI -1.05 to -0.20) log10 eCFU/ml for the injectable bedaquiline-containing regimen (P = 0.019), -0.35 (95% CI -0.65 to -0.13) log10 eCFU/ml for the all-oral bedaquiline-based regimen (P = 0.054), and -0.29 (95% CI -0.78 to +0.22) log10 eCFU/ml for the RHZE regimen (P = 0.332). Thus, M. tuberculosis killing rates from sputa were higher among patients who received bedaquiline but were further improved with the addition of an injectable aminoglycoside.